Remembering the Past, Educating for the Present and the Future: Personal and Pedagogical Stories of Holocaust Educators
By (Author) Samuel Totten
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th October 2002
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Teaching of a specific subject
The Holocaust
Second World War
European history
940.53180712
Hardback
272
Includes the stories of some of the most noted Holocaust educators working in the United States today, including their efforts to gain an ever-deepening knowledge about the Holocaust, their initial efforts to teach about it, and their involvement in curriculum development, staff development, and other outreach projects. This collection is comprised of essays about Holocaust education by a diverse group of educators involved primarily at the secondary level of schooling (grades 7-12). In their essays, the contributors relate the genesis of their interest in the Holocaust and the evolution of their educative efforts. There is a critical need to teach about the Holocaust in a pedagogically sound and historically accurate manner. This group of essays recounts the motivation of educators teaching primarily at the secondary level (grades 7 to 12), recounting their efforts to gain an ever-deepening knowledge about the Holocaust, their initial efforts to teach about it, their on-going teaching efforts and the changes they have made along the way, and their involvement in curriculum development, staff development, and other outreach projects. Various authors also include the insights and reactions of their students to the material.
SAMUEL TOTTEN is Professor, College of Education, University of Arkansas.